Page 2AThe Battalion/Wednesday, November 20,1985 Opinion Senate bill right the second time The purpose of having a dead week is to give students time to study for final exams. But many professors choose to ignore the dead week provisions in the University regulations. The reg ulations exist for a reason, and the faculty needs to start follow ing them. Student Government is proposing that the regulations not only be enforced, but that dead week “be used by all professors as a review of all material to be included on the final examina tion.” The revised bill is a vast improvement over the original, which basically regurgitated the regulations. The bill sets down definite guidelines for academic activity during dead week. Student Government should be commended for re-thinking the bill and giving it a true purpose. Dead week needs to be just that — dead. If the University does not want to give students a time to prepare for finals, it should not provide for such a time in its regulations. As long as the dead week provision exists, it should be upheld. The Battalion Editorial Board. PKESDBW REJWS usrsm PLM1DQMIIK ^ DEFICIT! 1981 1983 “N IFTOONE JUSTYflSHE Roum. UB heh m... . Deb< ByJU Sta LETS TO MAGIC, BUIE SMOKE. WO MIRRORS... ...m OUT CONGRESS SETSEM mm ora “Debate, per [other extrac bridges the gaj ind career” - Chronicle of Hi Texas A&M’: ;hance to brid losts 40 team: :ountry for a ec. 6-8. “We want to other studei Kraemer, A&M lecturer in spe "But, more imj let the debate s Ether students c Stu OCApr By Ml Sam is or Campus At elle Davis e It’s not how you nuke ’em, it’s how many time It’s only fair, with the summit in progress, that we pay tribute to the world’s great stockpiles of atomic weapons. Without them there is a good chance that Ron-: aid Reagan and Mikhail Gorba-: Art Buchwald chev might not be meeting in Switzer land today. A recent survey revealed that being blown up by a nuclear weapon is not the biggest fear in the world today. It’s the fact that people can be snuffed out more than once that has most citizens on the globe slightly nervous. According to a report by Ruth Sivard, a former official of the U.S. Arms Con trol and Disarmament Agency, there are now enough weapons on earth to kill 58 billion human beings. The catch is there aren’t 58 billion people in the world. Professor Sowa Bratten, who special izes in nuclear snuff statistics, says there is an answer to this. “Since we’re short on the living and long on the weapons, the scientific community no longer counts how many people we can kill, but rather how many times we can kill them.” “How many times is that?” He took out his pocket calculator. “We can knock off everyone in the world 12 times — with favorable wind conditions, of course.” “That’s a big improvement,” I said. “I recall just a few years ago that the super powers were lucky if they could kill each person five times. To what do you credit the breakthrough?” “Better quality control. In the old days building atomic weapons was little more than a mom-and pop business. Mom stuffed the bombs with uranium, and pop screwed on the fuses. This was okay for Hiroshima and Nagasaki, but it just wasn’t good enough for a global arms race. No one was thinking big.” “How did number one and number two move the arms buildup into the 20th century?” “Their military advisers warned them that the low post-World War II kill ratio would no longer keep pace. Without ex tra fallout they could not guarantee the safety of their citizens.” “Thank God for the military,” I said. He continued, “Crash programs were started, and larger bangs were devel oped, with the help of giant cost over runs. “It was obvious, as the demand in creased for third-generation hardware, the nuclear powers would spend more and more of their gross national prod uct on weapons. Edward Teller, the fa ther of the H-bomb, said, ‘The building up of larger and more powerful atomic weapons is the only way to stop the arms race.’” “He didn’t say that,” I said. “Maybe not,” Bratten admitted, “but it sounds like something he would say. In any case we all know if you’re going to make a nuclear omelette you first have to crack the plutonium.” “This still doesn’t explain howtfl perpowers managed to increase! stockpiles.” “The powers didn’t intend to many deadly weapons.' They jus] lucky. But it wasn’t the size of the that made everyone happy. A f«| make a nuclear bomb. Thetrickis liver it where you want it to where the real progress has been* The breakthrough in the present! ery systems has given man new “Do you think we have now read plateau in overkill?” He laughed, “You ain’t seen not yet.” pus. Sam, one is a small ta fans. Davis : who were a Sam at first, But bein; isn’t the on for loving ot “I lived summer an Art Buchwald is a columnist I Los Angeles Times Syndicate, it,” she says, myself and to myself, cramped up Davis say: get away fr of the day. “A lot of all day, and able to stan However campus isr roses. “You hav clean up tl says-. Davis, rn Classroom intimidation The New Right’s newest assault on academic freedom Efforts to make people conform to Anthony T. one particular posi- PodeStO tion or ideology are Guest Columnist almost always justi-» m T ■mi fied with lofty-sounding rhetoric, such as the need to protect our country from subversion, or the need to preserve or der. The New Right has just come up with a new excuse for intimidating those who don’t agree with its ideology:, to protect college students from “misinfor med” or “inaccurate” teaching. This fall, a new national organization was founded called “Accuracy in Acade mia.” While AIA claims to “combat the dissemination of misinformation” on our college and university campuses, it epitomizes the New Right’s theory of education, in which diverse points of view and the free flow of ideas are seen as un-American activities. AIA’s founder, Reed Irvine, has headed an organization for the past 16 years entitled “Accuracy in Media,” whose purpose is to intimidate and ha rass the members of the media who don’t agree with his right-wing views. Ir vine has built his reputation, and a $1 million organization, on the principle that there is only one “accurate” way for a journalist to cover a story. Now he’s decided there’s only one “right” way for a professor to teach a course. When “Accuracy in Academia” was announced this summer, many were horrified by its rhetoric, but few took it seriously. AIA, however, is emerging as a formidable institution. It already has volunteers on about 150 campuses across the country and has raised $50,000 of a $160,000 annual budget. Now AIA has hired as its new director a former New York Congressman, John LeBoutiller, whose skill at fundraising is matched only by his talents at red-bait ing those with whom he disagrees. When LeBoutillier warns against creeping socialism, he’s referring to ac tivities by members of the Democratic Party leadership, like House Speaker Tip O’ Neill. According to LeBoutillier, former presidential contender Senator George McGovern is “scum.” When he talks about radical brainwashing, he’s talking about what Harvard professors did to him. LeBoutillier contends that leading American journalists and nu merous liberal groups are pawns in a Soviet-sponsored “disinformation” cam paign, and while in Congress, co-spon sored a bill that would have created a House subcommittee on internal secu rity. Given AIA’s founder and new direc tor, it comes as no surprise that this new watchdog group isn’t concerned, as the name suggests, with upgrading the qual ity of education at our nation’s institu tions of higher learning. It’s not inter ested in encouraging academic freedom or balance in the classroom. Instead, it is designed to intimidate those who are teaching what AIA’s first director, Malcolm Lawrence, calls “in correct information which leads to con clusions that may be distasteful from the point of view of our national heritage or national security . . . .Just plain bad facts.” Take, for example, Dr. Mark Read er’s political science course at Arizona State University. According to AIA, it constitutes “anti-nuclear propaganda” because it overemphasizes such things as “fears of nuclear war, power and weapons.” It isn’t “verifiable” facts AIA is wor ried about, it’s “bad” facts. Take Cynthia McClintock, an associate professor of political science at George Washington University. Her course syllabus includes U.S. government papers and a textbook put out by the conservative Hoover In stitution. But she’s on AIA’s hit list be cause she shows a film that is critical of the U.S.-backed Contras in Nicaragua. AIA “logic” dictates that there is only one correct way to teach students about our involvement in Vietnam; there is only one true cause of the Civil War; and there is only one acceptable inter pretation of Franklin Roosevelt’s presi dency. And if a professor doesn’t toe AIA’s line, he or she will be investigated by AIA, perhaps pressured to change the content of the course or vilified in AIA’s new national newsletter. And it’s not just professors who are being intimidated. Students will wonder . if their future might suffer by ai questions or revealing their politic liefs and ideas. Such chilling activities are higl 1 appropriate anywhere. They seen ticularly offensive on a university pus, where teaching difftt 1 viewpoints and interpretations isT tegral part of the education pt» The losers in AIA’s efforts are til tely the students. Any effort to limit the exdiaitf ideas leads to the “dumbing doW education as a whole. Those wit trying to keep “biased” facts on ideas out of the college classroom following in the tradition of those want to censor Shakespeare’s $ and Juliet. They have forgotten tW purpose of education is to teacl dents to grapple with complexities learn how to think. Not, as Reedlf would have it, what to think. Anthony T. Podesta is preside 1 , People for the American Way, a# l ney and a former professor ofpc 1 '- | science at Barat College of the Heart in Lake Forest, Illinois. Mail Call Uncovering cults EDITOR: While Sondra Pickard , in her Nov. 6 article, por trays cults to be merely “alternative religions,” incom patible with the dominant culture, there is a real dan ger present in such cults as the Mormons, Unification Church, Scientology, EST, TM, and a host of other “religious alternatives.” These groups do indeed provide answers and ac ceptance, as Dr. Stadelman points out. However, what Dr. Stadelman and others‘don’t realize is these “answers” to the many problems we face are only tem porary solutions. These cults, which are “characterized by major de viations from Orthodox Christianity relative to the cardinal doctrines of the Christian faith” (Walter Mar tin, The Rise of Cults), have many distinguishing char acteristics which one needs to be aware of. These in clude new “truths,” new interpretations of Scripture, Non-Biblical Sources of Authority, another Jesus or Messiah, changing theology, salvation by works, false prophecy and a number of other fatal doctrines. To anyone really seeking the truth, I would recom mend Understanding the Cults by Josh McDowell & Don Stewart, or any of numerous books on the market which takes the shroud off of these groups and ex poses them for what they really are: perversions and distortions of Biblical Christianity. Mark Shepperd ’86 In time for drop-add EDITOR: ^ While watching the CBSEveningNews on Nov. 6,1 saw a report on an organization called Accuracy in Academia. This conservative group clandestinely monitors professors across the nation trying to root out those they feel are teaching falsehoods and mis perceptions. During the report the camera panned a map of the United States with pins marking the schools which the organization has agents at work in. Sure enough, when the map of Texas came into view, there was a pin marking the site of Texas A&M. I hope ya’ll AIAers are on the ball and able to get your report out in time for drop-add next semester. It’s been my experience that individuals who draw fire from close-minded conservatives are usually the most challenging and interesting thinkers. They give me the opportunity to learn different views, exercise my mind and form my own opinion — the reason I’m attending A&M. Thomas B. Cowart ’85 Letters to the Editor should not exceed 300 words in length. The editorial staff reserves the right to edit letters for style and length but will make every effort to maintain the author’s intent. Each let ter must be signed and must include the address and telephone number of the writer. 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